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Transcript
Help is just a phone call away!
Clinical Cases
• Goals and Objectives
– Provide an overview of common syndromes
– Acute v chronic
– Dose makes a poison
• Dose related v idiosyncratic
– Immediate action needed
– Limited antidotes
– Consult the Poison Center (1-800-222-1222)
DPPT Case Series
We will present a series of clinical
vignettes and problem solve with you.
If you recognize the case and know the
diagnosis, please do not spoil it for the
others!
Case # 1
• A 38 year old male presents to the
Emergency Department with urinary
retention, hallucinations, agitation and
mumbled speech
Introduction
• commonly occurs but is frequently
unrecognized
• frequently AP is an unsuspected adverse
effect of medications
Acetylcholine Receptors
• receptors
– Muscarinic
– Nicotinic
Anticholinergic Poisoning
• Central
• Peripheral
Anticholinergic Poisoning
• Children are particularly sensitive
• Down syndrome
Anticholinergic Poisoning
– Mad as a wet hen
– Blind as a bat
– Dry as a bone
– Red as a beet
– Hot as a hare
Anticholinergic Agents
• Medications
– Anticholinergics
– Antihistamines
– Psychoactives
• Plants
Not so quiet Chamomile
• In March 1994 the New York City Health
Department investigated 7 cases of AC
poisoning
• Tea was prepared from leaves labeled as
Paraguay tea
• Manifestations occurred within two hours
of tea consumption
MMWR, March 24, 1995/vol.44/no.11
Adrenergic vs Anticholinergic
Adrenergic Syndrome
Mydriasis
Tachycardia/HTN
Hyperthermia
Disorientation
Agitation
Hallucinations
Bowel sounds present
Diaphoresis
Anticholinergic Syndrome
Mydriasis
Tachycardia
Hyperthermia
Disorientation
Hallucinations
Decreased bowel
sounds (unreliable)
Dry skin/mucous
membranes
Physostigmine
• severe agitation and refractory seizures
• Phystogmine may be considered in
tachycardia causing hemodynamic
compromise
• Avoid use in patients with bradycardia,
asthma or conduction delays
Case # 2
• A 40 year old female presents to the
Emergency Department with abdominal
pain, vomiting and blurry vision
Labs
• ABGs: pH=6.53, pO2 161, pCO2 16
• Lytes: Na=141 K=4.7 Cl=109 CO2=7
• BUN=11 Cr=0.9
Wide Anion Gap Acidosis
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
C (carbon monoxide, cyanide)
A (AKA)
T (toluene)
M (methanol)
U (uremia)
D (DKA)
P (paraldehyde, phenformin)
I (INH, iron)
L (Lactic acidosis)
E (ethylene glycol, everything else)
S (salicylates, strychtnine)
Labs
•
•
•
•
ABGs: pH=6.53, pO2 161, pCO2 16
Lytes: Na=141 K=4.7 Cl=109 Co2=7
BUN=11 Cr=0.9
Serum osmolarity=338
The “Osmolar Gap”
Measured Serum Osmolarity
Minus
Calculated Serum Osmolarity
[ 2(NA) + BUN/2.8 + Glucose/18+Etoh/4.6]
AG
mOsm
mEq/L
OG
0
Time since Ingestion
Methanol
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Antifreeze (window washer fluid)
Anti icing agent
Octane booster
Ethanol denaturant
Extraction agent
Solvent
Fuel source
CH3OH
Methanol
ADH
CH2O
Formaldehyde
ADH
CHOOH
Folate
CO2 + H2O
Formic Acid
Formic acid
• Metabolic acidosis
• Inhibits cytochrome oxidase
NAD+
NADH + H+
R-OH
ADH
NADH
H+
Pyruvate
NAD+
Lactate
NAD+
CO2
NADH
H+
Acetyl-CoA
NADH
NAD+
Management
• Sodium bicarbonate as needed
• Inhibition of Alcohol dehydrogenase
CH3OH
X
Methanol
ADH
CH2O
Formaldehyde
ADH
CHOOH
Folate
CO2 + H2O
Formic Acid
Case #3
Know the community you deal
with!
35 yo female presents to
ED with cellulitis
History
• Doesn’t remember how it started
• Can’t remember where she was or what
happened over a 3 hour period three days
before presentation
What to do next?
• Blood work
– CBC slight elevation in WBC, no shift
• Wound culture
– No growth
• X-ray?
What does this suggest?
Course in hospital
•
•
•
•
Started on antibiotics
Surgery suggested by PCC
Pt transferred to tertiary care facility day 5
Day 6 did debridement in OR
– Dangers to patient
– Dangers to treatment team
Cultural aspects
• Day 4 patient related she had visited a
“healer”
• Other uses of this substance:
– Injected prior to travel to “ward off evil spirits”
– Boxers: build muscle mass/strength
– Esperitismo, Santeria, voodoo: often carried
personally or spread
• Toxicity to those contaminated
• Environmental/community contamination
Pre-op
Post-op
Forms of mercury exposure
• Elemental (liquid)
• Inorganic salts
• Organic salts
– Methyl mercury
– Ethyl mercury
Espanto
4 yo Mexican female was involved in
an accident and developed
“espanto.”
Espanto
The child did not recover so the
father’s cousin performed a
sweeping ceremony.
An herbal product was mixed with a
solution and the child washed down with
this. The child was then wrapped in a
blanket and placed in bed to sleep.
Three hours later the mother tried to
awaken the child and could not. Mother
stated child had a 5 second seizure.
The child was taken to the ED
VS: T 98 HR 132 RR 24
What would you do?
Na:
141 mequiv/L
K:
3.2 mequiv/L
Cl:
108 mequiv/L
CO2:
20 mequiv/L
BUN:
17
Cr:
0.9
Glucose:
130 mg/dl
Serum osmolarity: 356
Ethanol:
0
Methanol:
0
Isopropyl alcohol:
9 mg/dl
Acetone:
146 mg/dl
In a 1985 study performed by Trotter in which
patients in multiple clinic settings were asked
what folk conditions had been treated in their
families, 42.8% of informants (2,009
interviews) said they had treated susto at least
once.
Trotter RT. Folk medicine in the Southwest: myths and medical facts.
Postgrad Med. 1985;78(8):167-170, 173-176, 179,
Empacho
• 25 year old Latina mother brings her 1 yo
daughter for an intestinal disorder. She
describes fever, vomiting and diarrhea.
She calls it empacho.
• MD doesn’t find anything on PE so
suggests acetaminophen and clear fluids.
• 3 days later mother returns with child
reporting no change.
• Physician prescribes an antibiotic.
• Child returns for regular check up.
• Physician asks about the prior illness and
mother replies:
“It was okay.”
• The child seems lethargic and inattentive.
• Lead test reveals a lead of 60 mcg/dl
Mother has been using Greta: 99% lead
Empacho
• Thought to be caused by intestinal
blockage from clump of food attaching to
stomach or intestional wall
• PRs seek a santiguadora; MAs seek a
sobadora
• Treatment = combination of special
massage, prayers, and diet modification
A Very Bad High
Case #2 “Bad Heroin”
• ED doctor calls the PCC re: 25 year old
male complains he got bad heroin
• “feels funny”
• What would you ask?
Bad Heroin
• Snorts drug, uses 2-3X/week
• Tightness in chest
– Heart racing
• Headache
• Feeling of impending doom
Does this help?
Bad Heroin
•
•
•
•
HR 127
RR 25
BP 85/38
Pupils 9 mm
Any thoughts?
Bad Heroin
• ECG: “ischemic changes”
• Chemistries
– Na
143
–K
2.2
– Gluc 228
• Patient not making urine
Bad Heroin
• Given 5 liters of IVF
– Starts to void
• New labs:
– pH 7.27, pCO2 29.5 mm/Hg
– Lactate 10.6
Bad Heroin
• Patient has persistent hypotension and
acidosis
• Patient persistently tachycardic and
tachypneic
Center blood is
control blood
(actually that of S.
Marcus, MD) the
bloods on either
side are mixed
venous bloods from
central catheters of
2 patients
Why so red?
Bad Heroin
• pVO2 76!
What is happening?
Pulmonologist: “This
isn’t physiologically
possible!”
Bad Heroin
• Other case in NJ
– 3 in Middlesex
– 3 in Monmouth
Who would you alert?
What now?
Curves from Baud et al article
on cyanide poisoning
BMJ 1996;312:26-27
Unfortunately no literature citing
pVO2 levels
Bad Heroin
• Improves after sodium thiosulfate
Bad Heroin
• 2 other young men present same hospital
same s/s
Is this an outbreak?
What do you do?
Who do you contact?
Bad Heroin
• Other case in NJ
– Middlesex
– Monmouth
What now?
Confiscated drug analyzed
• And they found?
•
•
•
•
Tachycardia
Acidosis
Hypokalemia
Hyperglycemia
clenbuterol
Bad Heroin
• Reported through Epi-X
• Other cases in other states
Usually when you hear hoof beats
you see horses
Other outbreaks reported by
NJPIES
•
•
•
•
•
•
Methemoglobinemia in school and office
Puffer fish paralysis
Fentanyl
Botulism from non pharmaceutical grade
Phosphatidyl choline
Cullen
Case #5
A 2-year old boy presents in ED
with lethargy, vomiting, and
diarrhea
Case
• 2yo boy “licked” bottle in garage ~ 1h ago
• Presents with lethargy, vomiting, diarrhea,
coughing, “twitching”
• Physical exam:
– HR 95 BP 113/59 RR 18 95% on RA
– Skin, mucous membranes moist
– Pupils
What’s going on here?
• Lethargy
• Vomiting, diarrhea
• Miosis
Differential Diagnosis:
• Miosis
• Mydriasis
Toxidrome??
“Toxidromes”
•
•
•
•
•
Sympathomimetic
Anticholinergic
Cholinergic
Opioids
Sedative-Hypnotic
Sympathomimetic Toxidrome
• “Fight or Flight”
– ↑HR, ↑BP, ↑RR, ↑Temperature
– Mydriasis
– ↑ Peristalsis
– Diaphoresis
Cholinergic Toxidrome
• “DUMBBELS”:
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Diarrhea
Urination
Miosis
Bronchorrea
Bradycardia
Emesis
Lacrimation
Salivation
Opioid Toxidrome
•
•
•
•
Miosis
Lethargy
Respiratory depression
↓ peristalsis
What was in that bottle?
Chlorpyrifos 11.2%
Normal Nerve Function
neuro-transmitter=Acetylcholine
Normal Nerve Function
Acetyl choline
Normal Nerve Function
Termination of Action
Acetylcholine esterase
Acetylcholine
How Carbamates/OP
Insecticides Work
Acetyl choline esterase
Acetyl choline
Organo phosphate/Carbamate
Cholinergic Toxidrome
• “DUMBBELS”: Muscarinic Effects
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Diarrhea
Urination
Miosis
Bronchorrea
Bradycardia
Emesis
Lacrimation
Salivation
Cholinergic Agents:
Nicotinic Effects
• Skeletal muscles
– Fasciculations
– Twitching
– Weakness
– Flaccid paralysis
• Other (ganglionic)
– Tachycardia
– Hypertension
OP/C Toxicity: Atropine
• Antagonizes muscarinic effects
• Dries secretions; relaxes smooth
muscles
• Given IV, IM, ET
– No effect on pupils
– No effect on skeletal muscles
– IV in hypoxic patient
OP/C Toxicity: Treatment
Pralidoxime Chloride (2-PAM)
• Remove nerve agent from AChE in absence
of aging
• 1 gram slowly (20-30) in IV infusion
– Hypertension with
rapid infusion
Nerve Agent
• No effects at
muscarinic sites
AChE
• Helps at nicotinic sites
2-PAM
Bioterrorism 101
Case #6
• 15yo boy found “unresponsive” by friends,
brought in by EMS
• last seen 4 hours ago
• may have taken “blue chewies”
• In resuscitation bay:
–
–
–
–
–
Afebrile, HR 106, RR 14, BP 95/30, 98%
Lethargic, responds to painful stimuli
Pupils reactive
Skin warm, dry
Fingerstick 180
Case Presentation
•
•
•
•
PMHx: Depression, suicide attempts
Known ETOH, marijuana use
Known meds in home: Xanax®, Ibuprofen
Labs:
– Electrolytes, CBC WNL
– no osmolar gap
– ABG 7.34/42/141/-3.6
• Head CT : normal
• Drug screen: + Benzos + THC
Differential Diagnosis
• “Blue chewies”
– www.addictions.org
– www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov
– www.drugarm.org
Toxins causing hypotension?
Toxins causing hypotension
AND bradycardia
Toxins causing Hypotension, Bradycardia
Pupils
Glucose
ECG
Other
α blockers
Normal or
AV block
ß blockers
Normal or
AV block
CCBs
Normal or
AV block
CNS depressants
Sinus brady
Clonidine
Sinus brady
Responds to stim
Organophosphates
Sinus brady
Cholinergic
toxidrome
Digoxin
Abnormal
Hyperkalemia
Mental status may
be normal
Case Presentation
• Friend offering more information states
that patient may have taken something
else…..
“What’s Norvasc®?”
(Nifedipine)
Calcium-Channel Antagonists
• frequently prescribed
• Available in sustained-release (SR)
preparations
• 1999 PCC data: 5th leading cause of
poisoning deaths
Calcium channel blockade:
Myocardial Cell
Vascular smooth muscle cell
Calcium-channel antagonists:
Clinical Manifestations
• Hypotension=most common
• Receptor selectivity lost in overdose but:
– Verapamil: AV nodal block
– Amlodipine: tachycardia or “normal” HR
• Hyperglycemia
• Acute lung injury
• Usually within 2-3 hrs unless SR
Calcium-channel antagonists:
management
• Serial EKG
• Decontamination: AC, WBI
• Hypotension:
–
–
–
–
–
–
Fluids
Calcium
Pressors
Insulin/glucose
Glucagon
Other therapies
Case #7
• A 28 year-old man is found unconscious
indoors at a construction site.
• He had been working with a power washer
all morning before his colleagues left him
alone to get lunch.
Most common inhaled poison
• Incomplete combustion of fossil fuels
• Fire-related deaths/suicides
• U.S. averages about 500 deaths per year
Sources of CO
• Cookers/heaters
– Gas, coal, wood, kerosene – burning
• Automobile exhaust
• Engine powered tools, equipment
– Gasoline, methane, propane
• Building fires
Clinical Effects:
Flu-like syndrome!
NO COUGH
Pharmacokinetics
• Hgb Binding
• Myoglobin
• Elimination:
CO Decreases Oxygen
Unloading
Cardiovascular-Pathophysiology
• Myoglobin also binds CO with 60-times
affinity of O2
• Binding is enhanced with hypoxia
• Myocardial depression
• Displaced NO and vasodilation
Management
• Emergency Safety Net
– IV, Monitor, Fingerstick glucose
• Inotropes?
• Oxygen 1-3 ATA
Indications for HBO
• Generally accepted
• Controversial
Case # 8
• A 17 year-old woman is brought to the ED
by her mother for shortness of breath.
• She argued with her mother and then
locked herself in the bathroom.
• HR 108 bpm, BP 121/73 mmHg, RR 28
bpm, T 96.7ºF
Salicylates
• Pharmacokinetics
• Toxicokinetics
Overdose!
Methyl
salicylate
Acetyl
Salicylic
acid
Salicylic acid
2.5
%
ep
d
(pH
Urine
en
d
n
e
t)
More ASA Absorbed
Decreased Protein
binding
SATURATED
Salicyluric acid
Gentisic acid
Ether glucuronide
Ester glucuronide
Toxicity
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Primary respiratory stimulant
Tinnitus
Gastrointestinal upset and pylorospasm
Diaphoresis
Mental status changes
Acute Lung Injury
Increased brain utilization of glucose
Metabolic acidosis
Salicylate Uncoupling
ATP
Glycolysis
Glucose
Pyruvate
Pyruvate
decarboxylase
Kreb’s
Cycle
CO2
Lactate
Oxidative Phosphorelation
H2 O
SALICYLATES
ATP
NADH2
Management
• Decontamination
• Blood work
– ABG
– ASA level – mg/dL
– Electrolytes – K+, BUN/Cr
• An appropriate cry for help?
Urinary Alkalinization
• Acidemia facilitates transfer of ASA into tissue
• NaBicarbonate – increases urinary elimination 1020 times
– Target Urine pH 7.5-8.0
– Serum pH not to exceed 7.55
• Carbonic anhydrase inhibition: creates alkyluria
AND metabolic acidosis
Effects of Urinary Alkalinization
After Alkalinization
Tissues pH 6.8
Plasma pH 7.4
Urine pH 8
HA
HA
HA
H+ + A-
H+ + A-
H+ + A-
Temple AR. Acute and chronic effects of aspirin toxicity and their treatment. Arch Intern Med 1981;141:367